This MCQ module is based on: Superposition Reflection
Superposition Reflection
This assessment will be based on: Superposition Reflection
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Superposition Reflection
14.7 Principle of Superposition of Waves
What happens when two waves arrive at the same point simultaneously? The superposition principle states that the net displacement is the algebraic sum of individual displacements.
When the two waves have the same frequency and travel in the same direction, they produce interference — constructive (in phase, amplitudes add) or destructive (out of phase, amplitudes cancel). When they travel in opposite directions with same frequency and amplitude, they produce standing waves.
14.8 Reflection of Waves
14.8.1 Reflection at a Fixed End (Rigid Boundary)
When a wave pulse on a string meets a rigid wall (fixed end), it cannot move there. By Newton's Third Law, the wall exerts an equal and opposite force on the string, sending back a reflected pulse inverted (phase reversal of π).
14.8.2 Reflection at a Free End
If the end is free (e.g., a light ring sliding on a smooth post), the pulse reflects without inversion — same shape, same side.
14.9 Standing Waves and Normal Modes
Two identical waves travelling in opposite directions produce a standing wave. Mathematically:
The result is NOT a travelling wave — it's a stationary pattern where each point oscillates at frequency ω, but with amplitude \(2a|\sin(kx)|\) that depends on position x.
Antinodes: Points where amplitude is maximum 2a (sin(kx) = ±1, i.e., x = λ/4, 3λ/4, …).
Distance between two consecutive nodes (or two antinodes) = λ/2. Distance between a node and the nearest antinode = λ/4.
14.9.1 Standing Waves on a String (Fixed at Both Ends)
A string of length L clamped at both ends supports standing waves where both ends are nodes:
nth harmonic: ν_n = n·ν₁. All integer multiples are allowed.
14.9.2 Standing Waves in an Air Column
Open at both ends (like a flute): antinodes at both ends.
Closed at one end (like a panpipe): node at the closed end, antinode at the open end.
| System | Boundary | Allowed frequencies | Harmonics |
|---|---|---|---|
| String (both ends fixed) | Nodes at both ends | nv/2L | All |
| Open pipe (both open) | Antinodes at both ends | nv/2L | All |
| Closed pipe (1 closed) | Node + Antinode | (2n−1)v/4L | Odd only |
Interactive Simulation: Harmonic Frequency Calculator
Adjust string length, wave speed, and harmonic number to compute the frequency.
ν = 100 Hz
Standard guitar low E: L=0.65 m, v=130 m/s ⇒ ν₁ ≈ 100 Hz (close to 82.4 Hz of an actual E2 string).
Worked Example 1: Wires fixed at both ends
A wire 1.5 m long is fixed at both ends. Wave speed = 300 m/s. Find frequencies of the first three harmonics.
Worked Example 2: Closed organ pipe
An organ pipe is closed at one end and 1.0 m long. Speed of sound = 340 m/s. Find the fundamental and the first two overtones.
n=1 (fundamental): \(\nu_1 = 340/(4\times1.0) = \boxed{85\,\text{Hz}}\)
n=2 (3rd harmonic, 1st overtone): \(\nu_3 = 3\times 85 = \boxed{255\,\text{Hz}}\)
n=3 (5th harmonic, 2nd overtone): \(\nu_5 = 5\times 85 = \boxed{425\,\text{Hz}}\)
Note: even harmonics (170 Hz, 340 Hz) are forbidden — giving closed pipes their characteristic "hollow" tone.
Worked Example 3: Two travelling waves form a standing wave
Two waves y₁ = 0.05 sin(20x − 100t) m and y₂ = 0.05 sin(20x + 100t) m superpose. Find the equation of the resultant standing wave. What is the distance between nodes?
Materials: 4 m flexible rope, motor with adjustable speed (or by hand), partner.
- Tie one end of the rope to a wall.
- Hold the other end and oscillate it up and down rhythmically.
- Slowly increase your shaking frequency until you see a clean half-wavelength pattern (fundamental).
- Keep increasing — at certain "magic" frequencies, you'll see 2, 3, 4 loops (higher harmonics).
Between resonances the rope wobbles chaotically with small amplitude. At resonance, energy accumulates because reflections reinforce — the amplitude grows dramatically. This is why bridges (like Tacoma Narrows) can collapse if wind forces match a structural resonance.
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. A string of length L has wave speed v. Its fundamental frequency is:L1 Remember
Q2. A pipe closed at one end produces a fundamental note of 256 Hz. The next overtone has frequency:L3 Apply
Q3. True/False: At a node of a standing wave, the kinetic energy of the medium is always zero.L4 Analyse
Q4. Why are flutes (open pipes) generally richer in harmonics than closed pipes?L4 Analyse
Q5. HOT: Design a simple way to measure the speed of sound by observing standing waves in a string and an air column using only a tuning fork.L6 Create
Assertion–Reason Questions
(A) Both true, R explains A. (B) Both true, R does NOT explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.
A: A wave pulse on a string reflects with a phase change of π at a fixed end.
R: By Newton's Third Law, the rigid wall exerts an equal and opposite force on the string.
A: A closed pipe supports only odd harmonics.
R: A closed pipe must have a node at the closed end and an antinode at the open end.
A: Energy does not propagate in a standing wave.
R: A standing wave is the superposition of two equal travelling waves moving in opposite directions, with equal and opposite energy flux.